Word: da
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...soaked lunches in a city renowned for its excellent cuisine, and hit the nearby ski slopes on winter weekends. Few outside Lyons understood exactly what Interpol did, and its agents were regularly used as fictional mystery men, portrayed with creative inaccuracy in everything from Patricia Cornwell thrillers to The Da Vinci Code. Even now, a Google search for "Interpol" is likely to bring as many hits for a rock band with the same name as for this global band of law enforcers...
...Saturday’s opening night performance was entertaining and carefully composed, successfully bringing the high art of opera to the Dunster dining hall.For its 15th anniversary, the DHO returned to “Così fan Tutte,” Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s and Lorenzo da Ponte’s 1790 tale of female infidelity and mistaken identity. While the opening Friday evening performance was cancelled at the last minute, leaving me with visions of directorial anguish, half-assembled sets, and missed cues, my fears were misplaced. Producers Lucy S. Mackinnon...
...features all the best elements of theatre: mythical creatures, a magical world, and cross-dressing undergrads. The Roving Reporter put on his best skirt and went to go find out more.David J. Andersson ’09RR: Who do you play in “Fable Attraction”?DA: I play the sexy unicorn. Her name is Peggy Seuss, but she’s not a Pegasus. She makes that very clear. She has been described as all glitter and tits.RR: Alright, so complete this sentence: David Andersson is all blank and blank.DA: In relation to what?RR: Anything.DA...
...Saturday’s opening night performance was entertaining and carefully composed, successfully bringing the high art of opera to the Dunster dining hall.For its 15th anniversary, the DHO returned to “Così fan Tutte,” Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s and Lorenzo da Ponte’s 1790 tale of female infidelity and mistaken identity. While the opening Friday evening performance was cancelled at the last minute, leaving me with visions of directorial anguish, half-assembled sets, and missed cues, my fears were misplaced. Producers Lucy S. Mackinnon...
...overall spending for the first six months was flat at around $900 million. The U.K. industry could also take a hit if the screenwriters' strike in the U.S. continues. Pinewood's already announced a $6 million loss of revenue for 2008 because the strike postponed filming of The Da Vinci Code sequel. The unpredictable nature of the movie business is why the studio has in recent years branched into television and commercial filming - only half its revenues now come from films. So it hopes that the planned permanent sets will appeal to TV producers, as well as to moviemakers...